The Wicked Lady (1983) (2024)

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1983

Directed by Michael Winner

Synopsis

She's wild. She's wicked. And she really knows how to whip up a good time!

Caroline is to be wed to Sir Ralph and invites her sister Barbara to be her bridesmaid. Barbara seduces Ralph, however, and she becomes the new Lady, but despite her new wealthy situation, she gets bored and turns to highway robbery for thrills. While on the road she meets a famous highwayman, and they continue as a team, but some people begin suspecting her identity, and she risks death if she continues her nefarious activities.

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  • Cast
  • Crew
  • Details
  • Genres
  • Releases

Cast

Faye Dunaway Alan Bates John Gielgud Denholm Elliott Prunella Scales Oliver Tobias Glynis Barber Joan Hickson Helena McCarthy Mollie Maureen Derek Francis Marina Sirtis Nicholas Gecks Hugh Millais John Savident Marc Sinden Mark Burns Teresa Codling Celia Imrie Marianne Stone Pamela Cundell Lisa Mulidore Barrie Holland

DirectorDirector

Michael Winner

ProducersProducers

Yoram Globus Menahem Golan Michael J. Kagan

WritersWriters

Michael Winner Leslie Arliss

Original WriterOriginal Writer

Magdalen King-Hall

CastingCasting

Joyce Gallie

EditorEditor

Michael Winner

CinematographyCinematography

Jack Cardiff

LightingLighting

Michael Woollard

Camera OperatorsCamera Operators

Neil Binney Gerry Anstiss

Production DesignProduction Design

John Blezard

Visual EffectsVisual Effects

Albert Whitlock

ChoreographyChoreography

Madeleine Inglehearn

ComposerComposer

Tony Banks

SoundSound

Terry Poulton John Poyner Jim Roddan Hugh Strain

Costume DesignCostume Design

John Bloomfield

MakeupMakeup

Lee Harman

HairstylingHairstyling

Kaye Pownall Paul Huntley

Studios

London-Cannon Films Dawn Property Company The Cannon Group Golan-Globus Productions

Countries

UK USA

Language

English

Alternative Titles

La dama perversa, 狼妇, 女强盗, Die verruchte Lady, Den onde Lady, A gonosz lady, A Dama Perversa, La Dépravée, Разбойничката, L'avventuriera perversa, A Perversa, Злодейка

Genres

Drama Adventure

Releases by Date

Sort by

  • Date
  • Country

Theatrical

21 Apr 1983
  • The Wicked Lady (1983) (3)UK18

22 Apr 1983
  • The Wicked Lady (1983) (4)Ireland16

28 Oct 1983
  • The Wicked Lady (1983) (5)USAR

06 Sep 1984
  • The Wicked Lady (1983) (6)Hungary16

Physical

04 Jul 2016
  • The Wicked Lady (1983) (7)UK18

Releases by Country

Sort by

  • Date
  • Country
The Wicked Lady (1983) (8)Hungary
06 Sep 1984
  • Theatrical16
The Wicked Lady (1983) (9)Ireland
22 Apr 1983
  • Theatrical16
The Wicked Lady (1983) (10)UK
21 Apr 1983
  • Theatrical18
04 Jul 2016
  • Physical18DVD
The Wicked Lady (1983) (11)USA
28 Oct 1983
  • TheatricalR

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Popular reviews

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  • Review by Kat ★★★★ 2

    A period movie full of lavish dress, decore, and lots of bewbies. Melodramatic but fluffy enough that it doesn't get bogged down with some of the serious and ridiculous things that happen. So camp, this needs to be a cult classic. Faye Dunaway gets to be such a baddy in this. You can tell she's having a blast.

    - Has the worst sex scene I have ever seen
    - Best whip fight
    - Most liberal peasant town ever

  • Review by nathaxnne [hiatus <3] ★★★★★ 3

    CAREER OF EVIL

    I'm certain that someone very boring in your life has repeated 2 u the oft-repeated truism that crime does not pay. I suppose that depends entirely upon what u want out of crime. I say crime is its own reward. One of the things people appear to find most difficult about dealing with chaotically evil aligned individuals is that outside of a welter of immediately contradictory and frequently self-sabotaging short-term goals arising from stuff that u feel like doing or having rn or stuff u absolutely do not want to do or have in your presence/have to think about at all so u do other stuff to get that stuff or avoid the other stuff or if…

  • Review by AD917 ★★½

    As I understand it, Leslie Arliss’s 1945 adaptation of Magdalen King-Hall’s novel The Life and Death of the Wicked Lady Skelton is generally well regarded by those who have seen it as a high end example of classic British cinema. So of course I chose to watch the trashy Cannon production directed by sleaze-meister Michael Winner instead.

    I can’t speak to the differences between the two versions. But it seems unlikely that Gainsborough would’ve shoehorned quite so many naked boobies into one of their famous melodramas. I think it’s probably safe to assume that Arliss didn’t open his film with a nude couple being chased through a village square after having been caught in an act of infidelity. Surely you…

  • Review by RhodesMovie ★★★

    Wildly over the top, determinedly rambunctious, badly-behaved and regularly glorious. It's Sofia Coppola's Marie Antionette on Class A drugs. It ought be a cult classic, referenced an adult Carry On, but it has been consigned to a cinematic scrapheap to fester its days, only to be discovered by those with an appetite for buried rarities.

    Bodies hang from trees, Faye Dunaway is a camp villainess dressed like Queen Elizabeth I, children gawp at a man and woman shagging in a barn. This is all in the first 5-minutes. It continues as such, with beautiful scenes shot in grand old houses, showcasing the finest finery. There's also a dramatic orchestral score to embelish the richness.

    This is my first Michael Winner…

  • Review by Alex ★★½ 5

    Continuing my streak of watching very popular IP that everybody knows about and has heard of. Cannon does Merchant Ivory. Michael Winner’s idea of Jane Austen. A movie that so desperately wants to be a film. Too classical in its form and romance to be Ornate Sicko Mode. These are the choices that have earned me my Madonna like gay following

  • Review by Victoria ★★★

    Hay novela y una peli original. Yo sólo (no) vi a Michael Winner dirigiendo, a Cannon Group produciendo, a Faye Dunaway intentando hacer comedia y una pelea de látigos que pudo haber sigo perfecta pero se conformó y quedó en un lindísimo detalle.

  • Review by Bob R. ★★

    Michael Winner directs Faye Dunaway in this lurid tale about a 19th-century bad-girl who marries into high society. When her new husband moves them to the country, our heroine seeks a little excitement and decides to become a highway robber. Melodramatic, funny and a but lurid, The Wicked Lady is a nice example of the kind of latitude western filmmakers once had before the MPAA and the PG-13 rating pretty-much did away with farces intended for (admittedly, immature) grownups.

  • Review by drauch58 ★★★★

    Bah! Kicking myself for not watching this sooner. The almost unanimous negative reviews all over the net broke my "don't listen to anyone" barrier. Cannon Films, Michael Winner, Jack Cardiff, Faye Dunaway--obviously I was going to like this!

    Damn, this movie is gorgeous. I adore Renaissance costumes and sets, and Winner and Cardiff really take advantage of the large, adorned castle rooms, raving taverns, and the hills of the open countryside. And the piercing gaze Faye gives is just extraordinary. It's all very light in tone, despite bits of melodrama and even a hint of eroticism at times, with a good deal of nudity thrown in. I don't think the intention here was to make an award-winning adaptation of the novel or to trump the '45 version. I mean, hell... look at that poster. Just a goddamn good time that I plan on revisiting.

  • Review by Michael501 📺 ★★

    1983 In Review - November
    #14

    Caroline is to be wed to Sir Ralph and invites her sister Barbara to be her bridesmaid. Barbara seduces Ralph, however, and she becomes the new Lady, but despite her new wealthy situation, she gets bored and turns to highway robbery for thrills.

    An early Cannon Golan-Globus film directed by Michael Winner, an interesting combination. Winner described this film as Bonnie and Clyde in the 17th century, I mean sure, it stars Faye Dunaway but the film itself is just a bore. Dull and unexciting. Some films have been forgotten for a reason, this is such a film.

  • Review by Justin LaLiberty ★★½

    Like Merchant Ivory by way of Tinto Brass, only nowhere near as fun. Not as low of a low for Cannon as it is for Michael Winner, it pretty much exists solely to show topless women and public executions. That "famous" topless fight is sheer excess in the best possible way, however.

  • Review by Cate ★½

    The 'Directed by Michael Winner' credit appearing over an extended unnecessary tit-shot about sums this up.

    The one thing about that this that's better than the 1945 version is the meta-gag of Jackson's hanging not taking due to Alan Bates' unusually thick neck.

  • Review by matt lynch ★★½

    A tale so ribald it should've been introduced by Evelyn Quince. Alan Bates plays a 17th century highwayman named Jerry.

The Wicked Lady (1983) (2024)

FAQs

What is the movie The Wicked Lady about? ›

Is Wicked Lady Based on a true story? ›

The story was based on the 1945 novel Life and Death of the Wicked Lady Skelton by Magdalen King-Hall which, in turn, was based upon the (disputed) events surrounding the life of Lady Katherine Ferrers, the wife of the major landowner in Markyate on the main London–Birmingham road.

Who shoots the wicked lady? ›

Through murder, robbery and betrayal, Lady Skelton's double life catches her with her and she is mortally wounded by Kit Locksby. Dying, she confesses all to Kit and asks him to stay with her as she dies.

What story is Wicked based on? ›

Wicked is based on the 1995 Gregory Maguire novel, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. The book is a revisionist take on The Wizard of Oz, both the L. Frank Baum novel and the Judy Garland-led film.

Who was the killer in the movie Wicked? ›

Everything points to Stiles as the killer - she hates her mother, and so has motive - and she also does a fine job of being . . . well . . . wicked. She commits two violent acts and lusting for her father adds to her seeming guilt.

Where is the Wicked Lady buried? ›

Katherine died aged 26 in June 1660, a month after King Charles II returned to London to reclaim the throne, and she was buried at St Mary`s Church in Ware.

What is a wicked lady drink? ›

Medium-sweet rosé made using Zinfandel grapes from warm Californian vineyards. The juice from the crushed grapes spends a short time in contact with the skins which gives the wine a salmon-pink colour. Shows red-fruits on the rich, juicy palate.

What year is the Wicked Lady set? ›

The Wicked Lady is a film that was released in 1945 and starred Margaret Lockwood, James Mason, and Patricia Roc, and was set in 1683 England.

Who is the bad guy in Wicked? ›

Madame Morrible, the headmistress of Shiz University who discovers Elphaba's talents, is the main villain in Wicked. The role was originated on Broadway by Carole Shelley and is currently being played by Michele Lee.

How was the wicked witch killed? ›

She is killed when Dorothy throws a bucket of water on her, in attempt to put out a fire the witch bestowed on the Scarecrow. In the novel, Dorothy simply throws it on her in a fit of anger.

What is the history of Markyate cell? ›

Markyate Cell was built on the site of a 12th-century Benedictine Priory and takes its name from a cell, or smaller structure, that served the monastery. It was converted at great expense into a manor house in 1540, and then rebuilt in 1908 after a fire.

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